Broadband arbitrary wavelength multichannel laser source

ABSTRACT

A multi-channel laser source, including: a bus waveguide coupled, at an output end of the bus waveguide, to an output of the multi-channel laser source; a first semiconductor optical amplifier; a first back mirror; a first wavelength-dependent coupler, having a first resonant wavelength, on the bus waveguide; a second semiconductor optical amplifier; a second back mirror; and a second wavelength-dependent coupler, on the bus waveguide, having a second resonant wavelength, different from the first resonant wavelength. In some embodiments the first semiconductor optical amplifier is coupled to the bus waveguide by the first wavelength-dependent coupler, which is nearer to the output end of the bus waveguide than the second wavelength-dependent coupler, the second semiconductor optical amplifier is coupled to the bus waveguide by the second wavelength-dependent coupler, and the first wavelength-dependent coupler is configured to transmit light, at the second resonant wavelength, along the bus waveguide.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION(S)

The present application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17/104,929, filed Nov. 25, 2020, entitled “BROADBAND ARBITRARY WAVELENGTH MULTICHANNEL LASER SOURCE”, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17/022,901, filed Sep. 16, 2020, entitled “BROADBAND ARBITRARY WAVELENGTH MULTICHANNEL LASER SOURCE”, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/007,896, filed Jun. 13, 2018, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 10,811,848, issued on Oct. 20, 2020, entitled “BROADBAND ARBITRARY WAVELENGTH MULTICHANNEL LASER SOURCE”, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/519,754, filed Jun. 14, 2017, entitled “BROADBAND ARBITRARY WAVELENGTH MULTICHANNEL LASER SOURCE”, and of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/548,917, filed Aug. 22, 2017, entitled “BROADBAND ARBITRARY WAVELENGTH MULTICHANNEL LASER SOURCE”. The entire contents of all of the applications identified in this paragraph are incorporated herein by reference.

FIELD

One or more aspects of embodiments according to the present disclosure relate to light sources, and more particularly to a multichannel light source.

BACKGROUND

Some systems may use a silicon photonics integrated multichannel tunable laser source which has arbitrary wavelength channels covering a wavelength span of multiple hundreds to one or more thousands of nanometers, a span which is much larger than the gain bandwidth of a single reflective semiconductor optical amplifier (RSOA) die, or RSOA “chip”.

Such a laser source may be constructed using a single laser cavity for each channel, with, e.g., each laser constructed according to U.S. Pat. No. 9,270,078 (the “'078 patent”), which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. The channels may be combined externally to the cavity using a channel combiner such as an optical multiplexer (MUX), or additional ring resonator tunable filters. The use of a MUX external to the laser cavities for combining may have the disadvantages of (i) imposing a minimum channel spacing due to the periodicity of the passband response, (ii) introducing stop-bands where channels cannot exist, and (iii) for small channel spacing (and a large number of channels), incurring relatively high MUX losses. In an embodiment with multiple MUXs of different designs and channel spacings connected to one or more additional MUX to combine the outputs of the multiple MUXs to one common output, the optical loss may also be relatively high.

Ring resonator tunable filters may be used to combine the light from multiple lasers externally to the laser cavities, but such an embodiment includes further ring resonator tunable filters in addition to the ones used inside each laser cavity. As a result, more tunable elements may be included, requiring more stabilization circuits. Moreover, locking the external filter wavelength to the internal laser filter wavelength may increase the complexity of the system.

Thus, there is a need for an improved multichannel laser source.

SUMMARY

According to an embodiment of the present disclosure there is provided a multi-channel laser source, including: a bus waveguide coupled, at an output end of the bus waveguide, to an output of the multi-channel laser source; a first semiconductor optical amplifier; a first back mirror; a first wavelength-dependent coupler having a first resonant wavelength; a second semiconductor optical amplifier; a second back mirror; and a second wavelength-dependent coupler having a second resonant wavelength, different from the first resonant wavelength; the first semiconductor optical amplifier including: a first end coupled to the first back mirror, and a second end, the first wavelength-dependent coupler including: a channel port connected to the second end of the first semiconductor optical amplifier; a bus output connected to a first portion of the bus waveguide; and a bus input, connected to a second portion of the bus waveguide more distant from the output end of the bus waveguide than the first portion of the bus waveguide; the second semiconductor optical amplifier being coupled to the bus waveguide through the second wavelength-dependent coupler, the first wavelength-dependent coupler being nearer to the output end of the bus waveguide than the second wavelength-dependent coupler, the first wavelength-dependent coupler being configured to transmit light, at the second resonant wavelength, from the bus input of the first wavelength-dependent coupler to the bus output of the first wavelength-dependent coupler.

In one embodiment, the multi-channel laser source includes an output coupler at the output end of the bus waveguide, wherein the first wavelength-dependent coupler is configured to transmit light at the first resonant wavelength from the channel port of the first wavelength-dependent coupler to the bus output of the first wavelength-dependent coupler.

In one embodiment, the first wavelength-dependent coupler is configured to reflect a first portion of light received at the first resonant wavelength at the channel port of the first wavelength-dependent coupler, and to transmit, to the bus output of the first wavelength-dependent coupler, a second portion of light received at the first resonant wavelength at the channel port of the first wavelength-dependent coupler.

In one embodiment, the first portion is at least 10% of the light received, and the second portion is at least 40% of the light received.

In one embodiment, the first wavelength-dependent coupler is configured to transmit, to a fourth port of the first wavelength-dependent coupler, light received at the channel port at the second resonant wavelength.

In one embodiment, the fourth port of the first wavelength-dependent coupler is connected to an optical absorber.

In one embodiment, the first back mirror and the first semiconductor optical amplifier are configured as a reflective semiconductor optical amplifier.

In one embodiment, the first wavelength-dependent coupler includes a first ring resonator.

In one embodiment, the first wavelength-dependent coupler further includes a second ring resonator, the first ring resonator and the second ring resonator being configured to operate as a vernier ring resonator filter.

In one embodiment, the first wavelength-dependent coupler includes a grating assisted co-directional coupler.

In one embodiment, the first wavelength-dependent coupler further includes a distributed Bragg reflector connected in cascade with the grating assisted co-directional coupler.

In one embodiment, the first wavelength-dependent coupler includes a wavelength actuator for adjusting the first resonant wavelength.

In one embodiment, the multi-channel laser source includes a phase shifter between the first back mirror and the first wavelength-dependent coupler.

In one embodiment, the multi-channel laser source includes an amplitude modulator between the first back mirror and the first wavelength-dependent coupler.

In one embodiment, the first semiconductor optical amplifier is the same semiconductor optical amplifier as the second semiconductor optical amplifier.

In one embodiment, the first semiconductor optical amplifier includes a first waveguide in a first semiconductor chip and the second semiconductor optical amplifier includes a second waveguide in the first semiconductor chip.

In one embodiment, the first semiconductor optical amplifier includes a waveguide in a first semiconductor chip, and the second semiconductor optical amplifier includes a waveguide in a second semiconductor chip, different from the first semiconductor chip.

In one embodiment, the multi-channel laser source includes: a wavelength sensor configured to receive a portion of, and to sense a wavelength of, light emitted by the first semiconductor optical amplifier; and a control system configured: to receive a wavelength sensing signal from the wavelength sensor, to calculate a difference between the wavelength sensing signal and a wavelength setpoint, and to apply a wavelength correction signal to a wavelength actuator, to reduce the difference between the wavelength sensing signal and the wavelength setpoint.

In one embodiment, the multi-channel laser source includes a phase shifter between the first back mirror and the first wavelength-dependent coupler, wherein the wavelength actuator includes the phase shifter.

In one embodiment, the first wavelength-dependent coupler includes a coupler wavelength actuator for adjusting the first resonant wavelength, wherein the wavelength actuator includes the coupler wavelength actuator.

In one embodiment, the wavelength sensor is configured to receive light from a fourth port of the first wavelength-dependent coupler.

In one embodiment, the wavelength sensor includes a Mach-Zehnder interferometer having a first arm and a second arm, longer than the first arm, and a temperature control system configured to control the temperature of a portion of the second arm.

In one embodiment, the first semiconductor optical amplifier includes a waveguide in a first semiconductor chip; and the wavelength sensor includes a photodiode, the photodiode being in the first semiconductor chip.

In one embodiment, a multiplexed multi-channel laser source includes: a first multi-channel laser source, a second first multi-channel laser source, and a multiplexer, the multiplexer including: a first input, a second input, and an output, the multiplexer being configured: to transmit light from first input to the output, and to transmit light from second input to the output.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

These and other features and advantages of the present invention will be appreciated and understood with reference to the specification, claims, and appended drawings wherein:

FIG. 1A is a schematic illustration of a multichannel laser, according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 1B is a schematic illustration of an optical spectrum, according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 2A is a schematic illustration of a vernier ring resonator filter, according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 2B is a schematic illustration of a vernier ring resonator filter, according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 2C is a schematic illustration of a vernier ring resonator filter, according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 3A is a schematic illustration of a multichannel laser source, according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 3B is a schematic illustration of an optical spectrum, according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 4 is a schematic illustration of a multichannel laser source, according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 5 is a schematic illustration of a system for wavelength sensing, according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 6 is a schematic illustration of a multichannel laser source, according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 7 is a schematic illustration of a multichannel laser source, according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 8 is a schematic illustration of a multichannel laser source, according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 9A is a schematic illustration of a tunable grating-assisted co-directional coupler of a first type, according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 9B is a schematic illustration of a tunable grating-assisted co-directional coupler of a second type, according to an embodiment of the present invention; and

FIG. 9C is a schematic illustration of a tunable grating-assisted co-directional coupler of a third type, according to an embodiment of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The detailed description set forth below in connection with the appended drawings is intended as a description of exemplary embodiments of a multichannel laser source provided in accordance with the present invention and is not intended to represent the only forms in which the present invention may be constructed or utilized. The description sets forth the features of the present invention in connection with the illustrated embodiments. It is to be understood, however, that the same or equivalent functions and structures may be accomplished by different embodiments that are also intended to be encompassed within the spirit and scope of the invention. As denoted elsewhere herein, like element numbers are intended to indicate like elements or features.

Referring to FIG. 1A, in a first embodiment, multiple RSOAs 100 of different band-gaps and material compositions are integrated to construct a multichannel tunable laser. Each RSOA provides optical gain to one or more of a plurality of laser channels, each generating light at a respective wavelength, and all channels are combined into a single output waveguide, or “bus waveguide” 115. In this embodiment, a single vernier ring resonator tunable filter set (or simply “vernier ring resonator filter”) is employed, for each channel, to perform gain selection inside the laser cavity to select the lasing wavelength, and to combine the lasing light with that of other channels into the single bus waveguide 115, all inside a laser cavity having a shared output coupler (or “output mirror”) 120. Each vernier ring resonator filter operates as a wavelength-dependent coupler, as discussed in further detail below. Only one vernier ring resonator filter is needed for each channel, and as many channels can be added as desired, at the expense of making the laser cavity longer. Each RSOA chip may be separately fabricated (e.g., out of a III-V semiconductor material) and aligned with (and bonded to) a silicon photonics chip which includes the other optical components shown (e.g., the vernier ring resonator filters 110, the bus waveguide 115, and the output coupler 120). The reflective surface of the RSOA may operate as the back mirror of the laser cavity. In some embodiments, the back mirror is a separate element from the semiconductor optical amplifier. FIG. 1B shows an example of an optical spectrum that may be generated by the embodiment of FIG. 1A. A fourth port of each vernier ring resonator filter may be connected to an optical absorber 145 (or used for wavelength sensing), as discussed in further detail below.

Referring to FIG. 2A, in some embodiments, each vernier ring resonator filter is a four-port device including three multimode interference couplers (MMIs) 210A-C, connected together with waveguide paths referred to as ring-halves 220A-220D. Each MMI has four ports that may be referred to as an input port 230A, an output port 230B, a coupled port 230C, and an isolated port 230D. The ratio of (i) power transmitted to the coupled port to (ii) power supplied to the input port may be referred to as the coupling factor. If the output port 230B is defined to be the port opposite the input port 230A, as in FIG. 2A, then the coupling factor may also be referred to as the “cross coupling” and the ratio of (i) the power transmitted to the coupled port to (ii) power supplied to the input port may be referred to as the “bar coupling” (the terminology employed in the '078 patent). The input port and the isolated port may be referred to (e.g., in the '078 patent) as “back end” ports and the output port and the coupled port may be referred to (e.g., in the '078 patent) as “front end” ports. Other examples of vernier ring resonator filters are disclosed in the '078 patent.

Each pair of ring-halves forms, with two respective HMIs, a closed optical path that may be referred to as a ring resonator (or as a “simple” or “single” resonator, to distinguish it from a vernier ring resonator filter, which may include two or more (coupled) simple ring resonators). Light may be coupled into or out of this closed optical path through the MMIs. For example, for a first resonator including the first MMI 210A, the first and second ring halves 220A, 220B, and the second MMI 210B, light propagating in the forward direction (from the RSOA to the output coupler) may enter the input port 230A of the first MMI 210A, and propagate around a first ring, formed by the first and second ring halves 220A, 220B and the first and second MMIs 210A, 210B. A portion of the light propagating around this ring may be coupled out of the first ring and into a second ring formed by the third and fourth ring halves 220C, 220D and the second and third MMIs 210B, 210C. At a wavelength for which the round-trip phase around the closed path is a multiple of 2π, the ring resonator may be said to be resonant, and light coupled into the ring resonator interferes constructively with light circulating in the ring resonator, resulting in greater circulating power than is the case for wavelengths at which the ring resonator is not resonant. The wavelength (or frequency) separation between consecutive resonant wavelengths of the ring resonator is referred to as a the free spectral range (FSR) of the ring resonator. The second ring resonator, formed by the third and fourth ring halves 220C, 220D and the second and third MMIs 210B, 210C, may operate in a similar manner.

The vernier ring resonator filter (which includes the first ring resonator and the second ring resonator) may, as mentioned above, act as a wavelength-dependent coupler, with (for example, for forward travelling light) the input port 230A of the first MMI 210A being the input port of the vernier ring resonator filter, and the coupled port 230C of the third MMI 210C being the coupled port of the vernier ring resonator filter. At a wavelength at which both the first resonator and the second resonator are resonant, the vernier ring resonator filter is resonant, and the coupling ratio of the vernier ring resonator filter is high. The vernier ring resonator filter may be a reciprocal device, so that when it is resonant, light returning, on the bus waveguide 115, from the output coupler 120, may be coupled, through the vernier ring resonator filter 110, back to the RSOA. When a resonant wavelength of the first vernier ring resonator filter is nearly equal to a resonant wavelength of the second vernier ring resonator filter, the vernier ring resonator filter may be resonant at a wavelength that is between the two wavelengths. When the vernier ring resonator filter is not resonant, the coupling ratio of the vernier ring resonator filter is low. The first ring resonator and the second ring resonator may have slightly different free spectral ranges, so that the wavelengths at which the vernier ring resonator filter is resonant are relatively widely separated, and so that only one wavelength at which the vernier ring resonator filter is resonant falls within the gain bandwidth of the RSOA. This (relatively wide) separation between consecutive resonant wavelengths of the vernier ring resonator filter may be referred to as the free spectral range (FSR) of the vernier ring resonator filter. The width of a resonant peak of the vernier ring resonator filter (e.g., the wavelength range over which the coupling ratio is within 3 dB of the maximum coupling ratio in the peak) may be referred to as the “bandwidth” of the vernier ring resonator filter, and it may be expressed in units of wavelength or frequency. In some embodiments, a two-ring vernier ring resonator filter such as that of FIG. 2B, or a three-ring vernier ring resonator filter such as that of FIG. 2C, may be used instead of the two-ring vernier ring resonator filter of FIG. 2A in the embodiment of FIG. 1A (or in the embodiments of FIGS. 3A, 4, and 5, discussed below). The resonant wavelength of a vernier ring resonator filter may be tuned using phase shifters 135 (FIG. 1A) which may use heaters, as shown for example in FIGS. 2B and 2C, or which may use p-n or p-i-n junctions, as described, for example, in the '078 patent. In some embodiments each of the MMIs shown in FIGS. 2A-2C has a cross coupling ratio equal to its bar coupling ratio.

Referring again to FIG. 1A, a plurality of vernier ring resonator filters 110 according to FIG. 2A (or alternate embodiments of the vernier resonator, such as those disclosed in the '078 patent) may be used to couple a respective plurality of RSOAs to a bus waveguide, at the output end of which a broadband partially reflective element acts as the output coupler 120 for all of the channels. Each RSOA chip 100 may provide optical gain in a respective wavelength band. The RSOA chips 100 may include different respective epitaxial (“epi”) designs or material systems, and have different respective gain spectrum center wavelengths, spanning, together, a large spectral range. The number of channels and the bandwidth in each band may be limited by the gain bandwidth of the RSOA chip 100 for that band. Each RSOA chip may include an array of RSOAs 105, each RSOA 105 being formed as a separate waveguide in the RSOA chip 100, and each providing optical gain for a respective one of the channels using the RSOA chip 100. As used herein, a “band” or “wavelength band” refers to a range of wavelengths over which an RSOA chip has appreciable gain.

In some embodiments, each channel includes a phase shifter 130 (Δφ) and an amplitude modulator 140 (ΔT). Phase shifters 130 may be included to enable accurate control of lasing wavelengths, and amplitude modulators 140 may be included to enable modulation of the laser power. The bandwidth over which amplitude modulation inside laser cavity may be performed is inversely proportional to the cavity length. In some embodiments, amplitude modulation at rates of a few kHz, or a few MHz, may be used for channel identification or for homodyne/heterodyne detection at a receiver; modulation at GHz frequencies may be impractical, in some embodiments, because of the length of the cavity.

In some embodiments, as an alternative to the use of amplitude modulators, the RSOA bias is modulated with the desired amplitude modulation pattern. This eliminates the need for separate amplitude modulators inside the laser cavity which add loss, but increases the complexity of the RSOA drive circuitry. The length of the laser cavity may be roughly the same for all channels, and increases for all channels as more channels are added. The cavity length may be selected so that the wavelength separation between cavity modes (the free spectral range of the cavity) is greater than the bandwidth of any of the vernier ring resonator filters, so that only one mode at a time will lase in any channel. For example, for a cavity free spectral range of 10 picometers (pm), a cavity length of about 5 cm may be used; this cavity length may accommodate 100 channels or more.

The output mirror may, for example, be implemented with a 1×2 power splitter with a broadband high reflector on one output arm, where the split ratio of the 1×2 power splitter determines the reflectance of the output mirror, and where the splitter is implemented with a broadband MMI or a directional coupler, and the broadband high reflector is implemented with a metal coating, or a Sagnac loop. The total spectral span of the multichannel laser may ultimately be limited by the characteristics of the broadband MMI or coupler used in the output mirror. In some embodiments, the broadband output mirror is implemented with an advanced thin film coating integrated in the output waveguide, or with a broadband (e.g., chirped) DBR grating included in the output waveguide.

Referring to FIG. 3A, in a second embodiment a multichannel laser source includes a plurality of multichannel lasers each having a respective bus waveguide. A respective broadband partially reflective element acts, in each multichannel laser, as a respective output coupler 120 for all of the channels of the multichannel laser. The outputs of all of the multichannel lasers are combined in a band multiplexer (MUX), to form the output of the multichannel laser source. The embodiment of FIG. 3A may be used if the bandwidth of a readily available output coupler 120 (as used, for example, in the embodiment of FIG. 1A) is not sufficient to cover a desired spectral span, or if the cavity length would be too long if the multichannel laser source were constructed according to FIG. 1A. The embodiment of FIG. 3A may be more compact than the embodiment of FIG. 1A, if the band MUX is compact. FIG. 3B shows an example of an optical spectrum that may be generated by the embodiment of FIG. 3A.

As used herein, a multichannel laser refers to a laser having a plurality of channels, such as the laser of FIG. 1A, and being capable of producing light at more than one wavelength simultaneously, the channels sharing at least one element (e.g., the output coupler 120 of FIG. 1A). As used herein, a multichannel laser source refers to a light source that is capable of producing light at more than one wavelength simultaneously, and that includes one or more lasers (such as the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 3A, which includes three multichannel lasers).

FIG. 3A shows one bus waveguide for each band, i.e., for each of the RSOA chips 100, but this correspondence is not required. Each bus waveguide may collect light from a plurality of channels using a single RSOA chip 100 as illustrated, or it may collect light from a plurality of channels using more than one different RSOA chip 100 (e.g., it may collect light from one or more channels using a first RSOA chip 100 and from one or more channels using a second RSOA chip 100), or each of a plurality of bus waveguides may collect light from a respective subset of a plurality of channels using a single RSOA chip 100.

Referring to FIG. 4, a third embodiment may be more compact than the embodiments of FIGS. 1A and 3A, if an inhomogeneously broadened RSOA material is used (such as quantum dot (QD) or quantum dash (QDASH) material) in one or more of the RSOA chips 100 instead of a quantum well (QW) heterostructure. Inhomogeneously broadened gain materials can support lasing of multiple modes in a single waveguide (i.e., in a single RSOA) in the RSOA chip 100. The wavelength spacing between channels sharing an RSOA in the QD or QDASH RSOA chip may be larger than the homogeneous broadening width of the RSOA material, so that the channels do not compete for gain to a significant extent. QD or QDASH materials may not be readily available for all bands of the multichannel laser source; accordingly some of the RSOA chips 100 may use such materials, and some others may use other materials. The RSOA chips that are inhomogeneously broadened may then have more than one channel per RSOA (i.e., per waveguide in the RSOA chip). In the embodiment of FIG. 4, the top-most RSOA chip (used for the “p” wavelength band) is inhomogeneously broadened and includes only one RSOA 105, which supports multiple channels (of which three are shown) simultaneously; the other two RSOA chips 100 are configured to have only one channel per RSOA. FIG. 3B shows an example of an optical spectrum that may be generated by the embodiment of FIG. 4.

It will be understood that in some embodiments, single ring resonators, or composite ring resonators including more than two ring resonators, may be used in place of one or more of the vernier ring resonator filters 110 of the embodiments of FIGS. 1A, 3A and 4. It will be understood that although only three RSOA chips and three bands are illustrated in FIGS. 1A, 3A, and 4, a multichannel laser or multichannel laser source may include more or fewer RSOA chips and bands.

Referring to FIG. 5, in some embodiments wavelength sensing may be performed using an unequal-arm Mach-Zehnder interferometer 510 and two photodetectors 520. Each of the photodetectors 520 may include a reverse-biased junction on or coupled to a waveguide, and may be fabricated on an RSOA chip 100 operating in the same wavelength band. The Mach-Zehnder interferometer 510 includes a first MMI 530 that acts as a splitter, and a second MMI 530 that acts as a combiner. The waveguide of a first arm 540 of the Mach-Zehnder interferometer 510 may lie alongside the waveguide of the second arm 550 of the Mach-Zehnder interferometer 510, except for a portion 560 that may be longer than a corresponding portion of the second arm 550 and may result in the length difference between the two arms 540, 550. The temperature of the Mach-Zehnder interferometer 510 may be sensed and controlled, to reduce the differential phase change in the Mach-Zehnder interferometer 510 that otherwise may occur if the temperature (and, as a result, the differential optical path delay) of the Mach-Zehnder interferometer 510 were to change. FIG. 5 shows two channels of a multichannel laser source which has more than two channels (the remainder of which are not shown in FIG. 5).

The lengths of the two arms 540, 550 may be selected so that when the wavelength of light received by the Mach-Zehnder interferometer 510 is the desired wavelength, the respective photocurrents generated by the two photodetectors 520 are equal. Accordingly, a feedback circuit may form an error signal by calculating (e.g., using a differential amplifier) the difference between two photocurrents, and the error signal may be amplified and filtered and fed back to one or more elements (or “wavelength actuators”) for adjusting the wavelength. Such a wavelength actuator may be part of a wavelength-dependent coupler (and may be referred to as a “coupler wavelength actuator”) and may be, for example, a phase shifter (e.g., a heater, or a p-i-n junction) on one or more of (e.g., on all of) the half-rings, on a tunable grating-assisted co-directional coupler (discussed in further detail below) and/or on a distributed Bragg reflector (discussed in further detail below). In some embodiments, if the free spectral range of the laser cavity of a channel is greater than the resonant bandwidth of the wavelength-dependent coupler, the phase shifter 130 may be controlled so as to keep a resonant frequency of the laser cavity within the resonant bandwidth of the wavelength-dependent coupler. In such an embodiment, the phase shifter 130 acts as an additional wavelength actuator that may simply follow the center wavelength of the wavelength-dependent coupler, or that may provide finer (or faster) wavelength control than the phase shifter of the wavelength-dependent coupler. In this manner each output wavelength may be controlled. Each of the output wavelengths may also be tunable, for example by adding an offset signal to the error signal before it is amplified and filtered by the feedback circuit. The Mach-Zehnder interferometer 510 may be fed a portion of the light emitted by the RSOA of the channel for which the wavelength is to be measured, e.g., it may be fed by light from the output port 230B of the first MIMI 210A of a respective vernier ring resonator filter of the channel for which the wavelength is to be measured (and controlled), as shown in FIG. 5.

FIG. 6 shows an embodiment of a multichannel laser that is analogous to the embodiment of FIG. 1A, in which the vernier ring resonator filters 110 of FIG. 1A have been replaced with grating-assisted co-directional couplers (e.g., tunable grating-assisted co-directional couplers (TGACDCs)) of a first type. These grating-assisted co-directional couplers operate as wavelength-dependent couplers, as discussed in further detail below. In a manner analogous to that of the embodiment of FIG. 1A, in the embodiment of FIG. 6 a TGACDC is employed, for each channel, to perform gain selection inside the laser cavity to select the lasing wavelength, and to combine the lasing light with that of other channels into the single bus waveguide 115, all inside a laser cavity having a shared output coupler 120. FIG. 1B shows an example of an optical spectrum that may be generated by the embodiment of FIG. 6.

FIGS. 7 and 8 show embodiments of multichannel laser sources each including a plurality of channels, using TGACDCs as both wavelength-selective output couplers and as couplers for combining the light generated by the plurality of channels. FIGS. 7 and 8 use TGACDCs of a second and third type, respectively, as discussed in further detail below.

Three different types of TGACDCs may be used: i) a first type (as described in Z.-M. Chuang and L. A. Coldren, IEEE JQE 29 (4) 1993 p. 1071) designed to 100% transmit distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) resonant wavelengths to the drop T port (FIG. 9A, “TGACDC1”), ii) a second type designed to partially reflect DBR resonant wavelengths back to the RSOA (FIG. 9B, “TGACDC2”), and partially transmit resonant wavelengths to the drop T port, and iii) a third, composite type, consisting of a regular DBR (as described in A. J. Zilkie et al., “Power-efficient III-V/Silicon external cavity DBR lasers,” Opt. Express 20, 23456-23462 (2012)) combined with a TGACDC of the first type, to form a composite device (FIG. 9C, “TGACDC3”), also designed to partially reflect DBR resonant wavelengths (wavelengths that are resonant both in the DBR and in the included TGACDC of the first type) back to the RSOA, partially transmit resonant wavelengths to the following TGACDC of the first type, and further 100% transmit (by the TGACDC of the first type) the resonant wavelengths to the drop T port. A composite TGACDC of the third type may behave qualitatively like a TGACDC of the second type, and may be used instead of a TGACDC of the second type to avoid difficult design constraints that may be present in a TGACDC of the second type. Off resonance (i.e., for wavelengths for which the TGACDC is not resonant) each of the three types TGACDC may behave as two substantially independent, parallel waveguides, with little or no coupling between them (i.e., light passing straight through the top waveguide with little or no coupling to the drop waveguide), and little or no reflection from the TGACDC.

In some embodiments all grating DBR wavelengths are made tunable by adding a waveguide integrated heater to the grating (e.g., using a metal on waveguide heater or a Si-doped integrated heater, possibly with an undercut to make it more efficient).

As mentioned above, if a TGACDC of the first type (the type of FIG. 9A) is used (as illustrated in FIG. 6, for example), each TGACDC performs the same function as one of the vernier ring resonator filters 110 of FIG. 1A, and all of the lasers (at different respective wavelengths) share an output mirror, the output mirror for all of the lasers being the common output mirror 120 shown.

Referring to FIG. 7, if a TGACDC of the second type 710 (the type of FIG. 9B) is used, the TGACDC 710 acts like a regular DBR mirror but transmits laser output light out to the bus waveguide. In this case no common output mirror is needed as each wavelength's output mirror is the respective TGACDC 710. This also provides the advantage that the cavity length for the respective laser at each wavelength is much shorter, close to a traditional single channel DBR, meaning that the cavity FSR is much larger, and each laser may therefore have a much larger tuning range between mode hops, and the number of lasers that can be added is not limited. A suitable TGACDC 710 of the type of FIG. 9B may however be more difficult to design and may have more design constraints and/or be more difficult to fabricate. FIG. 1B shows an example of an optical spectrum that may be generated by the embodiment of FIG. 7.

A TGACDC of the third type (the type of FIG. 9C) is an alternative implementation to the TGACDC of the type of FIG. 9B, but would have design constraints and/or fabrication difficulties relaxed because the DBR that acts as the laser mirror is separated from the GACDC functionality. FIG. 8 shows a multichannel laser source using TGACDCs of the third type 810. In FIG. 8 each composite TGACDC of the third type 810 is illustrated for simplicity as a simple TGACDC. FIG. 1B shows an example of an optical spectrum that may be generated by the embodiment of FIG. 8. Although the grating-assisted co-directional couplers are, in the descriptions of some embodiments, referred to as TGACDCs (“tunable grating-assisted co-directional couplers”), in some embodiments the grating-assisted co-directional couplers are not tunable.

In each of FIGS. 6, 7, and 8, wavelength sending and control may be performed by feeding a portion of the light emitted by the RSOA of the channel for which the wavelength is to be measured to a suitable wavelength sensor (as described, for example, with reference to FIG. 5), e.g., the wavelength sensor may be fed a portion of the power out of the “out1 through” port of the TGACDC. In other embodiments this port of the TGACDC is coupled to an optical absorber to prevent parasitic cavities or light from this port being back-reflected into the laser cavity or the bus waveguide.

As used herein, a “wavelength-dependent coupler” is an optical device with at least three ports, including a channel port, a bus input, and a bus output, and in which the coupling between ports, or the reflectance of one or more ports, depends on the wavelength of light fed to the wavelength-dependent coupler. The ports of the wavelength-dependent coupler may also be referred to by other names, as, for example, in the descriptions above of vernier ring resonator filters and of grating-assisted co-directional couplers. In some embodiments (e.g., those of FIG. 1A and FIG. 6), light fed to the channel port at a resonant wavelength of the wavelength-dependent coupler may be largely transmitted to the bus output of the wavelength-dependent coupler (e.g., with loss of between 0.1 dB and 1.0 dB, or of less than 0.1 dB), and light fed to the bus input at a wavelength different from the resonant wavelength of the wavelength-dependent coupler (or different from every resonant wavelength of the wavelength-dependent coupler, if it has more than one resonant wavelength) may be largely transmitted (e.g., with loss of between 0.1 dB and 1.0 dB, or of less than 0.1 dB) to the bus output of the wavelength-dependent coupler. The reflectance back to the channel port and the reflectance back to the bus input may be between 10% and 1%, e.g., less than 5% or even less than 1%. In other embodiments (e.g., those of FIGS. 7 and 8), light fed to the channel port at a resonant wavelength of the wavelength-dependent coupler may be partially reflected (e.g., with a reflectance of between 10% and 50%), and partially transmitted (e.g., with a transmittance of between 40% and 90%) to the bus output of the wavelength-dependent coupler, and light fed to the bus input at a wavelength different from the resonant wavelength of the wavelength-dependent coupler (or different from every resonant wavelength of the wavelength-dependent coupler, if it has more than one resonant wavelength) may be largely transmitted (e.g., with loss of between 0.1 dB and 1.0 dB, or of less than 0.1 dB) to the bus output of the wavelength-dependent coupler. The reflectance (i) back to the channel port, at a wavelength different from the resonant wavelength of the wavelength-dependent coupler (or different from every resonant wavelength of the wavelength-dependent coupler, if it has more than one resonant wavelength) and (ii) back to the bus input, may be between 10% and 1%, e.g., less than 5% or even less than 1%. A wavelength-dependent coupler may have a fourth port that may (as mentioned above) be connected to an optical absorber or that may be used as a source of a portion of the light generated in one of the channels, for use in a wavelength sensing and control system for the channel. Both possible uses of the fourth port are illustrated in FIGS. 6, 7, and 8, with arrows at the fourth ports of two of the wavelength-dependent couplers denoting light sent to a wavelength sensor. In some embodiments, the 3 dB bandwidth of the resonant characteristic of a wavelength-dependent coupler is between 0.01 nm and 1.00 nm.

As mentioned above, the vernier ring resonator filters (e.g., of FIG. 1A) and the grating-assisted co-directional couplers (e.g., TGACDCs) described herein are examples of wavelength-dependent couplers. For example, in FIG. 1A the channel port of the each of the vernier ring resonator filters is the upper left port, the bus input is the lower left port, the bus output is the lower right port, and the fourth port is the upper right port.

Any numerical range recited herein is intended to include all sub-ranges of the same numerical precision subsumed within the recited range. For example, a range of “1.0 to 10.0” is intended to include all subranges between (and including) the recited minimum value of 1.0 and the recited maximum value of 10.0, that is, having a minimum value equal to or greater than 1.0 and a maximum value equal to or less than 10.0, such as, for example, 2.4 to 7.6. Any maximum numerical limitation recited herein is intended to include all lower numerical limitations subsumed therein and any minimum numerical limitation recited in this specification is intended to include all higher numerical limitations subsumed therein.

Although exemplary embodiments of a multichannel laser source have been specifically described and illustrated herein, many modifications and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, it is to be understood that a multichannel laser source constructed according to principles of this invention may be embodied other than as specifically described herein. The invention is also defined in the following claims, and equivalents thereof. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A multi-channel laser source, comprising: a bus waveguide coupled, at an output end of the bus waveguide, to an output of the multi-channel laser source; a first semiconductor optical amplifier; a first back mirror; a first wavelength-dependent coupler having a first resonant wavelength; a second semiconductor optical amplifier; a second back mirror; and a second wavelength-dependent coupler having a second resonant wavelength, different from the first resonant wavelength; the first semiconductor optical amplifier comprising: a first end coupled to the first back mirror, and a second end, the first wavelength-dependent coupler comprising: a channel port connected to the second end of the first semiconductor optical amplifier; a bus output connected to a first portion of the bus waveguide; and a bus input, connected to a second portion of the bus waveguide more distant from the output end of the bus waveguide than the first portion of the bus waveguide; the second semiconductor optical amplifier being coupled to the bus waveguide through the second wavelength-dependent coupler, the first wavelength-dependent coupler being nearer to the output end of the bus waveguide than the second wavelength-dependent coupler, the first wavelength-dependent coupler being configured to transmit light, at the second resonant wavelength, from the bus input of the first wavelength-dependent coupler to the bus output of the first wavelength-dependent coupler.
 2. The multi-channel laser source of claim 1, further comprising an output coupler at the output end of the bus waveguide, wherein the first wavelength-dependent coupler is configured to transmit light at the first resonant wavelength from the channel port of the first wavelength-dependent coupler to the bus output of the first wavelength-dependent coupler.
 3. The multi-channel laser source of claim 1, wherein the first wavelength-dependent coupler is configured to reflect a first portion of light received at the first resonant wavelength at the channel port of the first wavelength-dependent coupler, and to transmit, to the bus output of the first wavelength-dependent coupler, a second portion of light received at the first resonant wavelength at the channel port of the first wavelength-dependent coupler.
 4. The multi-channel laser source of claim 3, wherein the first portion is at least 10% of the light received, and the second portion is at least 40% of the light received.
 5. The multi-channel laser source of claim 1, wherein the first wavelength-dependent coupler is configured to transmit, to a fourth port of the first wavelength-dependent coupler, light received at the channel port at the second resonant wavelength.
 6. The multi-channel laser source of claim 5, wherein the fourth port of the first wavelength-dependent coupler is connected to an optical absorber.
 7. The multi-channel laser source of claim 1, wherein the first back mirror and the first semiconductor optical amplifier are configured as a reflective semiconductor optical amplifier.
 8. The multi-channel laser source of claim 1, wherein the first wavelength-dependent coupler comprises a first ring resonator.
 9. The multi-channel laser source of claim 8, wherein the first wavelength-dependent coupler further comprises a second ring resonator, the first ring resonator and the second ring resonator being configured to operate as a vernier ring resonator filter.
 10. The multi-channel laser source of claim 1, wherein the first wavelength-dependent coupler comprises a grating assisted co-directional coupler.
 11. The multi-channel laser source of claim 10, wherein the first wavelength-dependent coupler further comprises a distributed Bragg reflector connected in cascade with the grating assisted co-directional coupler.
 12. The multi-channel laser source of claim 1, wherein the first wavelength-dependent coupler comprises a wavelength actuator for adjusting the first resonant wavelength.
 13. The multi-channel laser source of claim 1, further comprising a phase shifter between the first back mirror and the first wavelength-dependent coupler.
 14. The multi-channel laser source of claim 1, further comprising an amplitude modulator between the first back mirror and the first wavelength-dependent coupler.
 15. The multi-channel laser source of claim 1, wherein the first semiconductor optical amplifier is the same semiconductor optical amplifier as the second semiconductor optical amplifier.
 16. The multi-channel laser source of claim 1, wherein the first semiconductor optical amplifier comprises a first waveguide in a first semiconductor chip and the second semiconductor optical amplifier comprises a second waveguide in the first semiconductor chip.
 17. The multi-channel laser source of claim 1, wherein the first semiconductor optical amplifier comprises a waveguide in a first semiconductor chip, and the second semiconductor optical amplifier comprises a waveguide in a second semiconductor chip, different from the first semiconductor chip.
 18. The multi-channel laser source of claim 1, further comprising: a wavelength sensor configured to receive a portion of, and to sense a wavelength of, light emitted by the first semiconductor optical amplifier; and a control system configured: to receive a wavelength sensing signal from the wavelength sensor, to calculate a difference between the wavelength sensing signal and a wavelength setpoint, and to apply a wavelength correction signal to a wavelength actuator, to reduce the difference between the wavelength sensing signal and the wavelength setpoint.
 19. The multi-channel laser source of claim 18, further comprising a phase shifter between the first back mirror and the first wavelength-dependent coupler, wherein the wavelength actuator comprises the phase shifter.
 20. The multi-channel laser source of claim 18, wherein the first wavelength-dependent coupler comprises a coupler wavelength actuator for adjusting the first resonant wavelength, wherein the wavelength actuator comprises the coupler wavelength actuator.
 21. The multi-channel laser source of claim 18, wherein the wavelength sensor is configured to receive light from a fourth port of the first wavelength-dependent coupler.
 22. The multi-channel laser source of claim 18, wherein the wavelength sensor comprises a Mach-Zehnder interferometer having a first arm and a second arm, longer than the first arm, and a temperature control system configured to control the temperature of a portion of the second arm.
 23. The multi-channel laser source of claim 18, wherein: the first semiconductor optical amplifier comprises a waveguide in a first semiconductor chip; and the wavelength sensor comprises a photodiode, the photodiode being in the first semiconductor chip.
 24. A multiplexed multi-channel laser source comprising: a first multi-channel laser source according to claim 1, a second first multi-channel laser source according to claim 1, and a multiplexer, the multiplexer comprising: a first input, a second input, and an output, the multiplexer being configured: to transmit light from first input to the output, and to transmit light from second input to the output. 